The Oshawa Vikings Rugby Club was established in 1959 by Chris Krause and is based in Raglan, the northmost neighbourhood in Oshawa. The Vikings offers Rugby programs for all ages and all abilities:

  • Minor Rugby: U6 Coed, U8 Coed, U10 Coed
  • Introduction to Contact Rugby: U12 Coed, U14 Girls, U14 Boys
  • Junior Rugby: U16 Girls, U16 Boys, U18 Girls, U18 Boys
  • Senior Rugby: U19 & Senior Women, U19 & Senior Men, Battleaxes Flag, Runes Old Boys, Mixed Ability Rugby

Notable accolades:

  • One of the very few sports organisations that provides opportunities for the entire family to be involved in the sport.
  • One of the largest continuous Junior Girls Rugby Program in Ontario starting from U6 to U18, and graduating to Senior Women.
  • Senior Women and Senior Men compete in the top provincial leagues, the Ontario Women’s League and the Marshall League respectively.
  • Oshawa Vikings Rugby Club is the first International Mixed Ability Sports (IMAS) accredited Mixed Ability Club in North America.
  • Vikings Mixed Ability team is the 2022 International Mixed Ability Rugby Tournament (IMART) Finalist and the only North American team attending the tournament.
  • Our players have been selected to represent local, regional and national teams, as well as being hired by local and international Rugby clubs throughout the years.

Club Sponsors

Oshawa Vikings Rugby Club would like to thank the following Club Sponsors for their continuing support


Land Acknowledgement

The Oshawa Vikings Rugby Club exists on lands that the Michi Saagiig Anishinaabeg inhabited for thousands of years prior to European colonization. These lands are the traditional and treaty territories of the Nations covered under the Williams Treaties, including the Mississaugas of Scugog Island First Nation, Alderville First Nation, Hiawatha First Nation, Curve Lake First Nation, and the Chippewa Nations of Georgina Island, Beausoleil and Rama.

We honour, recognize, and respect Indigenous Peoples as rights holders and stewards of the lands and waters on which we have the privilege to live. In our efforts towards reconciliation, we continue to build and strengthen relationships with First Nations, as well as the large Métis communities and growing Inuit communities here in Durham. We commit to learning from Indigenous values and knowledge, building opportunities for collaboration, and recognizing that we are all connected.